[NatureNS] FW: Study Shows Bats Might Eat Birds -- Reuters, Feb. 14, 2007

Date: Wed, 14 Feb 2007 21:21:42 -0400
From: Jim Wolford <jimwolford@eastlink.ca>
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Linda Lusby provided this story from the Environmental News Network (ENN).

Down toward the bottom of the story, the text reads "..... both parents and
their naive young migrate from Africa back to Europe in the autumn, the
researchers said."

Surely this quotation should read "....from Europe to Africa in the
autumn..."???  Comments from readers?

Cheers from Jim in Wolfville
----------

Subject: Study Shows Bats Might Eat Birds -- Reuters, Feb. 14, 2007

Environmental News Network story:

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and Gas

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Study Shows Bats Might Eat Birds

February 14, 2007 ‹ By Reuters

WASHINGTON -- Bats, lauded for scooping up mosquitoes and other nasty pests
but reviled for drinking blood and spreading rabies, now have another
unpopular habit to live down -- it appears they eat songbirds, scientists
said Tuesday.
 
Spanish and Swiss researchers said they had nailed down controversial
evidence that one large species of bat preys on little birds as they migrate
through the dark of night over the Mediterranean.
 
They said giant noctule bats, large bats with an 18-inch wingspan, were
eating mostly insects during the spring but appeared to have a diet heavy in
bird meat during the autumn.
 
No other animal preys on birds that migrate at night, and this species of
bat may have switched to this abundant food source recently, they reported
in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS ONE.
 
"In the course of a few million years, bats colonized most ecological niches
and learnt to exploit a wide array of food sources including arthropods,
pollen, fruit, small terrestrial vertebrates and even blood," Ana
Popa-Lisseanu and Carlos Ibanez of the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Cientificas in Seville, Spain, and colleagues wrote.
 
Researchers on the team had earlier reported finding bird feathers in the
feces of the bats, creating a storm of controversy, with some biologists
saying the bats must have accidentally eaten feathers floating in the air.
So the Swiss and Spanish researchers decided to look for more direct
evidence. It is hard to tell what is going on in the middle of the night
high in the air over the sea, so they analyzed the blood of the bats.
 
Chemical variants called isotopes can tell what an animal has been eating
and carbon and nitrogen isotopes are especially useful for pinpointing the
sources of a diet.
 
The researchers tested the blood of the bats throughout the year and found
strong evidence that the flying mammals ate only insects in the summer, ate
a few songbirds in the spring, and then preyed heavily on birds in the
autumn.
 
This could be because both parents and their naive young migrate from Africa
back to Europe in the autumn, the researchers said.

"Every year, approximately five billion passerines (songbirds) cross the
Mediterranean basin during their autumn migrations," the Ibanez team wrote
in their report.
 
"A big proportion of them are small-sized; as an example, more than 90
percent of migrating passerines mist-netted in the study area have an
average body mass of less than 20 g (0.8 ounces). They thus represent a
multitude of potential hunting targets for a large bat like Nyctalus
lasiopterus."
 
The ability of giant noctule bats to catch migrating birds while they fly at
night appears to be unique, Ibanez and colleagues said.
"So far, no predator had been reported to exploit this extraordinarily
diverse and abundant food reservoir represented by nocturnally migrating
passerines," they wrote.
 
Source: Reuters 

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